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From the blog · March 5, 2026

Generators & Backup Power After Storms in South Carolina

When a storm knocks out power across the Pee Dee, the difference between a few uncomfortable hours and a genuine crisis often comes down to whether you have bac

Standby generator providing backup power after storms at a South Carolina home

Published March 5, 2026

When a storm knocks out power across the Pee Dee, the difference between a few uncomfortable hours and a genuine crisis often comes down to whether you have backup power — and whether it's connected safely. Here's how home backup power actually works in South Carolina, the safety rules that matter most, and how to choose between a standby and a portable setup.

Standby vs portable: which fits your home?

Standby generatorPortable generator
How it startsAutomatically, within seconds of an outageManually — you start and connect it
FuelNatural gas or propane, permanently connectedGasoline (or propane), refilled by hand
What it powersWhole home or selected essential circuitsA few essentials via a proper inlet
Best forFrequent or long outages; well pumps; medical needsOccasional, shorter outages on a budget

For rural properties around Effingham, Johnsonville, Olanta and the county — where restoration can take days — a Generac or Kohler standby unit with an automatic transfer switch is the popular, hands-off choice. In town, where outages are usually shorter, a properly connected portable setup may be enough.

The safety issue that can kill: backfeeding

Never backfeed a generator into an outlet

Plugging a portable generator into a regular outlet to power your house — "backfeeding" — is extremely dangerous. It can energize the utility lines outside and electrocute a lineworker trying to restore power, and it bypasses your home's protection. Any generator that powers house circuits must connect through a proper transfer switch or generator inlet installed by a licensed electrician. There is no safe shortcut here.

The transfer switch: the piece that makes it safe

A transfer switch is what separates your home from the utility grid while the generator runs, so power can't flow backward onto the lines. An automatic transfer switch (standard with standby units) senses the outage and switches over by itself. A manual transfer switch or generator inlet lets you safely connect a portable unit to selected circuits. Either way, this is the component that makes backup power legal and safe — and installing it is licensed work that requires a permit in South Carolina.

Sizing: don't guess

An undersized generator won't run what you need; an oversized one wastes money and fuel. We size to your real essentials — typically the refrigerator, well pump, HVAC or at least heat, some lighting and outlets, and any medical equipment — and design the circuit list around that. Our generator and surge protection service covers sizing, installation, the transfer switch, and testing.

Pair backup power with surge protection

Storms bring both outages and surges, and the moment power switches and restores is a common time for surge damage. That's why we often install whole-home surge protection alongside a generator — the generator keeps you running, the surge protector keeps the storm from frying your electronics. Plan it before the season. Serving Florence and the Pee Dee, call (843) 595-9236.

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Answers

Frequently asked questions

Is it safe to plug a generator into an outlet to power my house?

No — that's backfeeding, and it's extremely dangerous. It can electrocute utility workers and bypass your home's protection. A generator must connect through a proper transfer switch or inlet installed by a licensed electrician.

Do I need a transfer switch for a generator?

Yes, for any generator powering your home's circuits. It isolates your home from the grid so power can't flow back onto the lines. Standby units use an automatic transfer switch; portables use a manual switch or inlet.

What size generator do I need?

It depends on which circuits you want to back up — fridge, well pump, HVAC, lighting, medical equipment. We size it to your real essentials so you're not under- or over-buying.

Standby or portable for storm outages in the Pee Dee?

For rural areas with long restoration times or critical needs like a well pump, a standby generator is worth it. For shorter in-town outages, a safely connected portable may suffice. Call (843) 595-9236.